Tuesday, March 16, 2010

Loans are Income? Writer Thinks So

Influential former New York Times tax reporter David Cay Johnston is back at it again, trying to stir up outrage at the thought of Los Angeles Dodger owner Frank McCourt apparently paying little or no federal or state tax over the past few years.

"The breakup of Frank and Jamie McCourt's marriage is making headlines because the couple, who own the Los Angeles Dodgers, lived an exceptionally lavish lifestyle. But what their divorce proceedings also reveal is how the official reports on incomes and tax burdens disguise reality (subscription required to read full article).

In six years the McCourts spent $ 108.9 million without incurring any federal or California income taxes, her lawyers said in court papers. The only levies that may have been paid were payroll taxes on Mrs. McCourt's salary as the nominal head of the Dodgers, and even that is not clear from the court filings.

"The parties have not paid any federal or California income taxes since they moved to California in 2004," her lawyers wrote in a filing seeking nearly a million dollars a month of maintenance pending the completion of the divorce."

Sounds egregious enough. Who doesn't think people should pay the tax that they owe?

But wait, what's this? The McCourt's actually didn't have any income during those years that the government could tax?

"We simply do not know how many people show a tiny AGI but in reality live lavish lives because they have income that escapes taxation or because, like the McCourts, they borrow against their assets."
It's difficult to grasp the full effect of Johnston's point. Is he saying that people who borrow should somehow be taxed on those borrowings? It seems that way. That would be news to the millions of homeowners who borrowed to purchase their houses.

Alternatively, is he perhaps a proponent of a national wealth or asset tax? Unfortunately the 16th Amendment doesn't appear to currently allow that, and in any event is in no sense the current law of the land with which to indict Frank McCourt.

Johnston attempts the common tactic of diverting attention from the real issue, exploding federal and state spending, and tries to focus the reader's attention on a phantom issue, which is the fact that some people legally and lawfully organize their own affairs to pay as little tax as possible.

Labels: , ,

3 Comments:

Blogger davidcay said...

You misread my column in Tax Notes. Perhaps I was unclear

Of course, loans are not income under our tax rules.

In the McCourt's case (and Mr. Wall's case) there are revenues and, evidently, profits.

The McCourt divorce papers show significant economic gains and there are hints that an audit may find unreported income, as I wrote.

The main issue in my column is the recognition rules, which allow some people to enjoy unlimited economic gains without paying taxes while others must pay their taxes currently.

A worker making the median wage of $500 a week (rounded) bears a total federal tax burden of 22%, compared to the McCourt's rate of zero.

On spending, as a previous column showed, paying higher taxes can actually result in more money in your pocket. Higher taxes can also make us poorer. It depends on what the tax money is spent on.

Subsidies to companies that help them destroy the competition are a prime example of taxes that make us poorer, while concentrating income in the hands of the few.

It is this redistribution of income upwards, and generally what tax revenue is spent on, that should be the issue, not the level of spending per se, which is so naive it should have been left behind after junior high school civics.

March 16, 2010 at 11:37 AM  
Blogger Unknown said...

Mr. Johnston, who responded as a good sport until winding up with a Parthian shot, can't really believe that a concern about overall spending levels by the public-sector is "naive."

At some point, an increased level of state control and ownership over wealth and property in a country will constitute a socialist rather than a capitalist economic system. If Socialism and Capitalism both yield measurably different socio-economic results, then is not a country’s adherence to one system over the other a serious issue?

If not, perhaps it is because the superiority of collectivism and egalitarianism are assumed by Mr. Johnston to be a settled question in every junior high school civics class. In fact, Mr. Johnston's last sentence might reasonably be interpreted as tacitly advocating or supporting collectivism and egalitarianism.

In any case, if Colorado CPA’s concern with spending levels is naive, then he is in good company as there are many of us out here similarly opposed to serfdom.

March 17, 2010 at 2:11 PM  
Blogger Tom said...

It's an outrage that my Junior High grades are being used against me. Besides, I thought that was all expunged by the judge.

March 17, 2010 at 7:40 PM  

Post a Comment

Subscribe to Post Comments [Atom]

<< Home

FREE hit counter and Internet traffic statistics from freestats.com